April 9, 1865 . . . The Aftermath and the Economics of War
…end the war. There were still two major armies in the field; but, everyone knew the surrender signaled that the American Civil War was coming to a close. Soldiers and…
…end the war. There were still two major armies in the field; but, everyone knew the surrender signaled that the American Civil War was coming to a close. Soldiers and…
…if they want to be in the good, secure companies but does not want to promote war profiteering? As noted in the article, even without war, the solder needs tooth…
…have the label on your clothing. Visited the Flag Ship REI store in Denver. Pretty impressive. If a camper or backpacker, the experience is like going to the Sears Christmas…
…a role in the decline of both Warren and Harris (and Warren may yet make a comeback) has been their effort to overcome the split among Dems over what to…
…of whether hydroxychloroquine should be prescribed off label based on the in vitro results is not the same as the question of should we be confident that it will work…
Labeling for Increased Profits, Farmer and Economist, Michael Smith It is a well-known marketing ploy to label, relabel, and even mislabel a product again and again to increase sales. We…
…which people can Google that wants us to pay $350 to be able to put their label on our packaging. But nobody knows who the hell they are, and this…
…models of this sort by the late Richard Goodwin, who had a Marx-influenced predatory model of class struggle cyclical fluctuations. Their early models were labeled as Kynes-Wicksell-Goodwin (KWG) models. But…
…funny and so true. The state of Ohio supreme court . . . And regarding the food item’s being called a “boneless wing,” it is common sense that that label…
…military spending even while demanding cuts elsewhere); David Broder, The War Recovery?, Washington Post, Oct. 31, 2010 (apparently suggesting war, and its huge military expenditures, as a way out of…